All Stories

  1. The impacts of biological invasions
  2. Seasonal Residency and Movement Patterns of Bonnetheads (Sphyrna tiburo) in Two Subtropical Estuaries and Coastal Waters of the South Atlantic Bight
  3. Increasing Global Expansion Speeds of Marine Invaders
  4. Enteroparasitic fauna of non-native Chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha) on the Chilean coast: host-parasite networks and the potential for spillback
  5. Warmer Is Deadlier: A Meta‐Analysis Reveals Increasing Temperatures Accentuate Disease Effects on Fisheries Hosts
  6. Two Hypotheses About Climate Change and Species Distributions
  7. Site-specific ontogenetic drivers of mercury concentrations in American alligators
  8. Seascape structure likely influences marsh-derived resource use by highly abundant estuarine consumers over a small spatial scale
  9. Non-uniform consumption of a novel, non-native seaweed by native consumers
  10. Mesopredator release moderates trophic control of plant biomass in a Georgia salt marsh
  11. Variation in Oceanographic Resistance of the World's Coastlines to Invasion by Species With Planktonic Dispersal
  12. Warmer is Deadlier: A meta-analysis reveals increasing temperatures accentuate disease impacts on fisheries hosts
  13. Invasive crab positively correlated with native predatory crab species over a regional scale
  14. Racial Composition and Homeownership Influence the Distribution of Coastal Armoring in South Carolina, USA
  15. High parasite prevalence in an ecosystem engineer correlated with both local- and landscape-level factors
  16. Quantifying the impacts of future shoreline modification on biodiversity in a case study of coastal Georgia, United States
  17. Exponential growth of private coastal infrastructure influenced by geography and race in South Carolina, USA
  18. The resistance of Georgia coastal marshes to hurricanes
  19. A model for understanding the effects of flow conditions on oyster reef development and impacts to wave attenuation
  20. A global synthesis of predation on bivalves
  21. Physical Ecosystem Engineers and the Functioning of Estuaries and Coasts
  22. Managing the threat of infectious disease in fisheries and aquaculture using structured decision making
  23. Reimagining infrastructure for a biodiverse future
  24. Facilitation between two dominant ecosystem engineers extends their footprints and degree of overlap
  25. Neither larval duration nor dispersal distance predict spatial genetic diversity in planktonic dispersing species
  26. The role of small‐scale environmental gradients on trematode infection
  27. Density-dependent predation and predator preference for native prey may facilitate an invasive crab’s escape from natural enemies
  28. A Methodology to Produce Specific-Pathogen-Free Penaeid Shrimp for Use in Empirical Investigations of Parasite Ecology
  29. The opposing roles of lethal and nonlethal effects of parasites on host resource consumption
  30. Differential equity in access to public and private coastal infrastructure in the Southeastern United States
  31. Engineering coastal structures to centrally embrace biodiversity
  32. Exotic asphyxiation: interactions between invasive species and hypoxia
  33. Using ecosystem engineers to enhance multiple ecosystem processes
  34. Responses of a tidal freshwater marsh plant community to chronic and pulsed saline intrusion
  35. Comparing edge and fragmentation effects within seagrass communities: A meta‐analysis
  36. Variation in helminth infection prevalence, abundance, and co-infection in an intermediate host across a large spatial scale
  37. Traits of Resident Saltmarsh Plants Promote Retention of Range-Expanding Mangroves Under Specific Tidal Regimes
  38. Influences of land use and ecological variables on trematode prevalence and intensity at the salt marsh‐upland ecotone
  39. Intraspecific diversity and genetic structure in the widespread macroalga Agarophyton vermiculophyllum
  40. Specific niche requirements underpin multidecadal range edge stability, but may introduce barriers for climate change adaptation
  41. Dead litter of resident species first facilitates and then inhibits sequential life stages of range‐expanding species
  42. Marine Parasites and Disease in the Era of Global Climate Change
  43. Effects of climate change on parasites and disease in estuarine and nearshore environments
  44. Environmental gradients influence biogeographic patterns of nonconsumptive predator effects on oysters
  45. Global biogeography of marine dispersal potential
  46. Negative indirect effects of hurricanes on recruitment of range-expanding mangroves
  47. Effects of novel, non-native detritus on decomposition and invertebrate community assemblage
  48. A comparison of diversity estimators applied to a database of host–parasite associations
  49. Black gill increases the susceptibility of white shrimp, Penaeus setiferus (Linnaeus, 1767), to common estuarine predators
  50. Freeze tolerance of poleward‐spreading mangrove species weakened by soil properties of resident salt marsh competitor
  51. Multiple factors contribute to the spatially variable and dramatic decline of an invasive snail in an estuary where it was long-established and phenomenally abundant
  52. Low concentrations and low spatial variability of marine microplastics in oysters (Crassostrea virginica) in a rural Georgia estuary
  53. Regional environmental variation and local species interactions influence biogeographic structure on oyster reefs
  54. Detrital traits affect substitutability of a range‐expanding foundation species across latitude
  55. Genetic diversity and phenotypic variation within hatchery‐produced oyster cohorts predict size and success in the field
  56. What factors explain the geographical range of mammalian parasites?
  57. High abundance of an invasive species gives it an outsized ecological role
  58. Correction to: Effects of Small-Scale Armoring and Residential Development on the Salt Marsh-Upland Ecotone
  59. Correction to: Generalizing Ecological Effects of Shoreline Armoring Across Soft Sediment Environments
  60. Stronger positive association between an invasive crab and a native intertidal ecosystem engineer with increasing wave exposure
  61. Sex, size, and prey caloric value affect diet specialization and consumption of an invasive prey by a native predator
  62. Mixed effects of an introduced ecosystem engineer on the foraging behavior and habitat selection of predators
  63. Promoting invasive species to enhance multifunctionality in a native ecosystem still requires strong(er) scrutiny
  64. Does predator-driven, biotic resistance limit the northward spread of the non-native green porcelain crab, Petrolisthes armatus?
  65. Not so fast: promoting invasive species to enhance multifunctionality in a native ecosystem requires strong(er) scrutiny
  66. Responses of an oyster host (Crassostrea virginica) and its protozoan parasite (Perkinsus marinus) to increasing air temperature
  67. Facilitating your replacement? Ecosystem engineer legacy affects establishment success of an expanding competitor
  68. Host and parasite thermal ecology jointly determine the effect of climate warming on epidemic dynamics
  69. The effects of tidal elevation on parasite heterogeneity and co-infection in the eastern oyster, Crassostrea virginica
  70. Effects of Small-Scale Armoring and Residential Development on the Salt Marsh-Upland Ecotone
  71. The double edge to parasite escape: invasive host is less infected but more infectable
  72. Contrasting complexity of adjacent habitats influences the strength of cascading predatory effects
  73. Generalizing Ecological Effects of Shoreline Armoring Across Soft Sediment Environments
  74. Variation in a simple trait of mangrove roots governs predator access to, and assemblage composition of, epibiotic sponges
  75. Genetic identification of source and likely vector of a widespread marine invader
  76. Global Mammal Parasite Database version 2.0
  77. Ocean currents and competitive strength interact to cluster benthic species range boundaries in the coastal ocean
  78. Genetic by environmental variation but no local adaptation in oysters (Crassostrea virginica)
  79. Non-native parasite enhances susceptibility of host to native predators
  80. Predators, environment and host characteristics influence the probability of infection by an invasive castrating parasite
  81. Predator effects on host-parasite interactions in the eastern oyster Crassostrea virginica
  82. Bad neighbors: how spatially disjunct habitat degradation can cause system-wide population collapse
  83. Mass mortality of a dominant invasive species in response to an extreme climate event: Implications for ecosystem function
  84. Invasion of novel habitats uncouples haplo-diplontic life cycles
  85. Consistency of trematode infection prevalence in host populations across large spatial and temporal scales
  86. The macroecology of infectious diseases: a new perspective on global-scale drivers of pathogen distributions and impacts
  87. The oceanic concordance of phylogeography and biogeography: a case study in N otochthamalus
  88. Invasive décor: an association between a native decorator worm and a non-native seaweed can be mutualistic
  89. Local adaptation to parasite selective pressure: comparing three congeneric co-occurring hosts
  90. Do native predators benefit from non-native prey?
  91. Development and characterization of microsatellite loci for the haploid–diploid red seaweedGracilaria vermiculophylla
  92. Invasion Expansion: Time since introduction best predicts global ranges of marine invaders
  93. Individual variation in predator behavior and demographics affects consumption of non-native prey
  94. Parasite infection pattern belies risk
  95. Biogeography of intertidal oyster reefs
  96. Predation risk predicts use of a novel habitat
  97. Boundaries in the ocean and the disadvantages of having a long larval life
  98. Engineering or food? mechanisms of facilitation by a habitat-forming invasive seaweed
  99. Large-scale spatial variation in parasite communities influenced by anthropogenic factors
  100. Forty years of experiments on aquatic invasive species: are study biases limiting our understanding of impacts?
  101. The biogeography of trophic cascades on US oyster reefs
  102. The Global Garlic Mustard Field Survey (GGMFS): challenges and opportunities of a unique, large-scale collaboration for invasion biology
  103. A Non-Native Prey Mediates the Effects of a Shared Predator on an Ecosystem Service
  104. Circulation constrains the evolution of larval development modes and life histories in the coastal ocean
  105. Climate controls the distribution of a widespread invasive species: implications for future range expansion
  106. Impacts of marine invaders on biodiversity depend on trophic position and functional similarity
  107. Water-soluble inorganic ions in urban aerosols of the continental part of Balkans (Belgrade) during the summer – autumn (2008)
  108. Host and parasite recruitment correlated at a regional scale
  109. Modeling the relationship between propagule pressure and invasion risk to inform policy and management
  110. Do invasive species perform better in their new ranges?
  111. Edges and Overlaps in Northwest Atlantic Phylogeography
  112. Climate and pH Predict the Potential Range of the Invasive Apple Snail (Pomacea insularum) in the Southeastern United States
  113. Positive versus negative effects of an invasive ecosystem engineer on different components of a marine ecosystem
  114. Indirect effects of parasites in invasions
  115. Performance of non-native species within marine reserves
  116. Impacts of an abundant introduced ecosystem engineer within mudflats of the southeastern US coast
  117. Density-dependent facilitation cascades determine epifaunal community structure in temperate Australian mangroves
  118. Invasive ecosystem engineer selects for different phenotypes of an associated native species
  119. Differences in anti-predator traits of a native bivalve following invasion by a habitat-forming seaweed
  120. ‘Caribbean Creep’ Chills Out: Climate Change and Marine Invasive Species
  121. Parasites and invasions: a biogeographic examination of parasites and hosts in native and introduced ranges
  122. Asymmetric dispersal allows an upstream region to control population structure throughout a species’ range
  123. Non-natives: 141 scientists object
  124. Human-driven spatial and temporal shift in trophodynamics in the Gulf of Maine, USA
  125. A framework for understanding physical ecosystem engineering by organisms
  126. Using Parasitic Trematode Larvae to Quantify an Elusive Vertebrate Host
  127. A hitchhiker’s guide to the Maritimes: anthropogenic transport facilitates long-distance dispersal of an invasive marine crab to Newfoundland
  128. Variable direct and indirect effects of a habitat-modifying invasive species on mortality of native fauna
  129. Native species behaviour mitigates the impact of habitat-forming invasive seaweed
  130. A practical approach to implementation of ecosystem‐based management: a case study using the Gulf of Maine marine ecosystem
  131. Behavioural interactions between ecosystem engineers control community species richness
  132. Differential escape from parasites by two competing introduced crabs
  133. Historical invasions of the intertidal zone of Atlantic North America associated with distinctive patterns of trade and emigration
  134. Poor phenotypic integration of blue mussel inducible defenses in environments with multiple predators
  135. Including parasites in food webs
  136. Competition in Marine Invasions
  137. Erratum
  138. Solving cryptogenic histories using host and parasite molecular genetics: the resolution ofLittorina littorea's North American origin
  139. Community impacts of two invasive crabs: the interactive roles of density, prey recruitment, and indirect effects
  140. Five Potential Consequences of Climate Change for Invasive Species
  141. USING PARASITES TO INFORM ECOLOGICAL HISTORY: COMPARISONS AMONG THREE CONGENERIC MARINE SNAILS
  142. Going against the flow: how marine invasions spread and persist in the face of advection
  143. CONTROLS OF SPATIAL VARIATION IN THE PREVALENCE OF TREMATODE PARASITES INFECTING A MARINE SNAIL
  144. POACHING, ENFORCEMENT, AND THE EFFICACY OF MARINE RESERVES
  145. Parasites alter community structure
  146. Response to Comment on "Divergent Induced Responses to an Invasive Predator in Marine Mussel Populations"
  147. Do artificial substrates favor nonindigenous fouling species over native species?
  148. Ecosystem engineering in space and time
  149. 10 Synthesis: Lessons from disparate ecosystem engineers
  150. Preface
  151. Using ecosystem engineers to restore ecological systems
  152. Divergent Induced Responses to an Invasive Predator in Marine Mussel Populations
  153. Intraguild predation reduces redundancy of predator species in multiple predator assemblage
  154. Going against the flow: retention, range limits and invasions in advective environments
  155. Invertebrate community responses to recreational clam digging
  156. Partitioning mechanisms of Predator Interference in different Habitats
  157. Partitioning mechanisms of Predator Interference in different Habitats
  158. Introduction of Non-Native Oysters: Ecosystem Effects and Restoration Implications
  159. Differential Parasitism of Native and Introduced Snails: Replacement of a Parasite Fauna
  160. MORE HARM THAN GOOD: WHEN INVADER VULNERABILITY TO PREDATORS ENHANCES IMPACT ON NATIVE SPECIES
  161. MARINE RESERVES ENHANCE ABUNDANCE BUT NOT COMPETITIVE IMPACTS OF A HARVESTED NONINDIGENOUS SPECIES
  162. Quantifying geographic variation in physiological performance to address the absence of invading species
  163. As good as dead? Sublethal predation facilitates lethal predation on an intertidal clam
  164. SCALE DEPENDENT EFFECTS OF BIOTIC RESISTANCE TO BIOLOGICAL INVASION
  165. Impact of non-indigenous species on natives enhanced by anthropogenic alteration of selection regimes
  166. Directing Research to Reduce the Impacts of Nonindigenous Species
  167. Physical habitat attribute mediates biotic resistance to non-indigenous species invasion
  168. BOOK REVIEW
  169. CASCADING OF HABITAT DEGRADATION: OYSTER REEFS INVADED BY REFUGEE FISHES ESCAPING STRESS
  170. Exposing the Mechanism and Timing of Impact of Nonindigenous Species on Native Species
  171. EXPOSING THE MECHANISM AND TIMING OF IMPACT OF NONINDIGENOUS SPECIES ON NATIVE SPECIES
  172. Competition between Two Estuarine Snails: Implications for Invasions of Exotic Species
  173. COMPETITION BETWEEN TWO ESTUARINE SNAILS: IMPLICATIONS FOR INVASIONS OF EXOTIC SPECIES
  174. Effects of body size and resource availability on dispersal in a native and a non-native estuarine snail
  175. Differential susceptibility to hypoxia aids estuarine invasion